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Key people at Consilium Capital Limited.
Consilium Capital Limited is a London-based corporate finance advisory firm that provides capital-raising services, strategic advice, and mergers and acquisitions execution for companies and investment funds. The firm primarily serves unquoted early-stage technology and healthcare businesses, assisting entrepreneurs with equity financing, debt structuring, and institutional investor engagement. Operating as a micro-entity with an annual turnover under £1 million and a balance sheet below £500,000, the advisory leverages a network of over 100 private equity houses and more than 300 lenders. In the first quarter of 2023, the firm expanded its operations by securing approval from the Financial Conduct Authority to establish Consilium Investments LP, an Alternative Investment Fund targeting innovative technology enterprises. The firm operates with key personnel including Senior Adviser Gloria Vargas, and the organization was founded in 2006 by David Robert Pollock.
Key people at Consilium Capital Limited.
Consilium Capital Limited is a boutique corporate finance firm and specialist investment bank founded in 2006, headquartered in London, United Kingdom, that advises and raises capital internationally for companies and investment funds focused on sustainable or impact investments.[1][2][4][6] Its mission is to support clients addressing global environmental or social challenges through businesses and investments that deliver both attractive financial returns and measurable impact, with sector expertise aligned to UN Sustainable Development Goals including clean energy, sustainable agriculture & forestry, sustainable oceans and aquaculture, financial inclusion, and multi-sector impact areas.[1] The firm provides services such as strategic advisory, fund and corporate structuring, M&A execution, and capital-raising as a placing agent to a wide international investor network, leveraging team members' 10-20 years of experience in sustainable investments; it is a signatory to the UN Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) and member of organizations like GIIN, CPIC, GPCA, and UKSIF.[1][2][3]
Consilium Capital Limited was incorporated on 23 May 2006 as a private limited company (company number 05826264) under SIC code 64999 for financial intermediation not elsewhere classified, with its registered office currently at Office 605, Albert House, 256-260 Old Street, London, EC1V 9DD.[6] Specific founding partners are not detailed in available records, but the firm has evolved from a general boutique investment bank offering capital raising, M&A, and corporate advisory into a specialist in sustainable and impact investments, joining the Global Impact Investing Network (GIIN) as a member since 2017.[2][4] Its focus has sharpened on international advisory for impact-oriented clients, supported by affiliations with global sustainability bodies that underscore its industry engagement.[1]
Consilium Capital rides the global impact investing wave, channeling capital into sustainable tech and innovation addressing UN SDGs amid rising demand for ESG-aligned investments driven by regulatory pressures (e.g., PRI signatory status), climate urgency, and investor shifts toward measurable social/environmental returns.[1][2] Its timing aligns with post-2017 GIIN membership during the explosion of green tech funding in clean energy, sustainable agriculture, and oceans tech—sectors facing tailwinds from net-zero policies, biodiversity initiatives (via CPIC), and financial inclusion tech for underserved markets.[1] By acting as a placing agent and structurer, it influences the startup ecosystem by bridging impact funds/companies with international capital, lowering barriers for early-stage sustainable ventures and amplifying tech solutions in multi-sector impact areas.[3][5]
Consilium Capital is poised to expand its niche leadership in sustainable capital-raising as impact investing scales toward trillions in AUM, fueled by trends like biodiversity credits, regenerative agtech, and blue economy innovations. Next steps likely include deeper M&A in clean energy/oceans tech and fund structuring for layered investor products amid 2025-2030 SDG deadlines.[1][3] Its influence may evolve through stronger GPCA/GIIN collaborations, potentially capturing rising private capital flows into climate tech—tying back to its core mission of blending returns with global challenge-solving.[2][6]